No sleep till…BROOKLYN!

Okay, no he isn't. I mean, I know lots of women my age have dads who are 84, but to me that is redunkulous. My parents dropped out of college to get married and I was born soon after, so they have always been what you'd call young. By my calculations, dad is 64 today. If I have added it up wrong, he will surely poke fun at me. He was going to be a nuclear physicist, so the math and science thing has always been his strong suit. But dad cannot spell his way out of a paper bag. I doubt he knows "paper bag" is two words. Together we make one well-rounded brain.

Remember the post I wrote about the bad art from my childhood? I am also going to inherit this sculpture up there, although believe it or not I like this one. The dark guy is the sculpture. The white guy is dad. In case you were confused.

Seeing as dad was always pretty close in age to me, he was never scary authority figure dad. Although he would spend the greater part of the weekend in the basement, watching sports on TV and swearing up a streak. But if I could stand all the swears, I could go in there with a small glass and he'd always share his Coca-Cola with me. He also ate boxes of Brach's Chocolate Stars while down there. What sugar high? Why so aggressive about the sports?

Other than that, he was pretty cool. Oh, except I had these gerbils, and they kept getting loose, and he said if the gerbils got loose one.more.time I had to get rid of them. So the next time they got loose, he was in the basement tossing out the F word at some football game, and my Uncle Jim had to sneak over and rescue Snoopy and Woodstock. Hey, I was seven. I wasn't good at gerbil naming yet.

When my parents got divorced, dad moved to Dallas, and I spent every summer and some Thanksgivings there, until I was, like, 25. I remember being there at Christmas the year I was 25 and it dawned on me, I am an adult now. I guess I don't have to schlep to Dallas all the time anymore.

But I liked hanging with dad. We went to Cancun, where we got totally ill from Montezuma's revenge. We went to the Gulf of Mexico, where I broke my toe and our hotel set on fire. And once we took a road trip across the country, where I had an allergic reaction to medication and my tongue blew up and we had to rush to an ER in Cheyenne, WY.

Good times!

But somehow they all were good times.

Dad was always a big hit with my friends when he came to see me at college. Here is is with Sleeping Beauty.

I remember I worked at a restaurant in a hoity-toity department store, and once when dad was visiting I had to work the dinner shift. "Your housemates and I will come get you at the end of your shift," dad said, "and we'll go out after."

There I was, serving quiches to the ladies who lunch and also apparently dinner, and there was a piano player entertaining us all with Killing Me Softly or something, and everything was soothing and monied and quiche-y, when out in the candy department was a clatter of drunken voices and singing and such awfulness.

It was dad. And my roommates. Drunker than I'd ever seen my roommates. And this was COLLEGE. I never saw my roommates anything BUT drunk. They used to get up and crack a beer at 10:00 Saturday morning to watch Pee Wee.

"HI, JUUUUNNNEEE!" they all screamed across the low-lit restaurant. I could not serve my last Manhattan fast enough to get those drunks out of there. Go, dad.

It was that same visit that it was time for the next term of school, and when I went to get my financial aid, I couldn't get enough. I was crying, and my father said, "F*** them. Get in the car and come to Atlanta with me" (he lived there briefly).

So I did. I packed my things and moved there. Like, right then.

In the car, I had brought cassettes, but my father had only one. It was the Beastie Boys, who I had never heard. He said, "You play your tape, then when it's my turn, just put in that Beastie Boys tape."

By the time we were out of Ohio, all we were doing was flipping that Beastie Boys tape over and over. She's crafty, and she'd just my type. I still love that song.

The living-in-Atlanta didn't last long, but I do have a memory of dad wanting me to go out one night, and me not being in the mood, and him doing an interpretive hula dance with him pantomiming drinking and laughing and having a gay old time.

I went.

Had we both consumed 50 salt licks apiece? Bloaty and his daughter, Miss Bloaterson, request the honor of your presence. And bring a container of Morton's, will ya? With salt.

Dad and I both lived in LA from 2000 till 2007, and that was fun. We took many road trips together, including the one we took to Colorado to the Mike the Headless Chicken festival. I participated in the world's longest chicken dance, and I think technically I am part of a world record. You knew you were here for a reason.

Dad was mostly in it for the fried Twinkies, and also he wanted to see the firefighters and police play football with a raw chicken, which we did. I kept worrying the whole town's police and fire would have salmonella and be out of commission. Because I'm breezy and fun that way.

That is totally sweet! The relationship you and your father have is totally awesome; I wish I had that kind of relationship with my father. You are a very lucky woman. 😀
God bless you daddy and wish him many more to come.

I would like to mention two things:
1. Happy B-day June’s Dad
and
B. Are you on the Topamax again? with the lack of proof reading your post?…………..
(sorry, I’m a bit sensitive about lack of proof reading at the moment as I just bought and started reading a book by one of my favorite authors, and due to the number of proof reader errors, the only thing keeping me from sending it back with everything they missed marked is the fact that it’s signed. Cue end of longest comment in parentheses every.)

A great tribute to your dad. I loved the photos, especially the one of you on the pool table and the one on your wedding day. If your hair is that white and beautiful let is go natural, girl. I vote for the pool table photo for the wall at your new job. Look at the bottom of your feet and that bat on the pool table.

What a lovely post June .. your Dad sounds like a larikin. :o) It appears to me that you had no chance at all of having fine straight hair .. lucky girl.
Happy Birthday all the way from Australia June’s Dad!!!!

You wrote a very touching tribute to your dad. Any Hallmark sentiment would pale in comparison!
It couldn’t have been any more perfect, timing that is, when I logged onto your site the advertisement on the left was titled “What Makes a Father Special.”
I hope your dad has a very special birthday celebration!
Take plenty of photos tomorrow! :O)

Your dad reminds me of my favorite chef, Jonathon Waxman. I am semi-obsessed with Jonathon, I hope I don’t transfer that over to your dad. Because how embarrassing would it be when your dad tells me I’m too old for his liking and I just keep asking him to make me a bowl of pasta???

June- My dad is probably 84 and his big day is tomorrow. Likes the young girls too, but is not nearly as much fun as your dad. Maybe we could trade sometime?? Please. I like sports.
Nice piece, thanks for sharing your pictures and your love.

If my daddy was still alive, he’d be screaming, “Lemme outta this coffin!!!”
For some reason, I read the part of your Mexican adventure as “I broke my toe and set the hotel on fire” and I was all “What?? She didn’t tell us THAT story!”

Yeah, Hulk, my ex-best-friends cat lived till 25, as well. Anyway, Pal from MA, I remember your dad used to whistle, and be totally NOT in the basement on weekends, and Id think, God, what is WRONG with that guy? He is so CHEERFUL. Why doesnt he swear?

Happy Birthday, Dad-of-June!
You definitely won the most-fun-Dad competition. My Dad? Plays golf. That’s about it. Oh, and he was a radio announcer, which was cool, but it didn’t make him fun. Sorry, Dad!
Anywho, Hulk? My neighborhood friend when I was a kid? Her cat lived until it was 25! And it was an outdoor kitty! HAH!

This is adorable. It makes me want to hang out with my dad, but recently all he wants to do is go backpacking. I hate hiking. I hate camping. I hate camp food. I hate backpacks.
Maybe I’ll just send him a card for Father’s Day.

Yeah, Hulk. My cats have all lived to get their high school and or college diplomas. The Shining Path was twenty-one when we had to assist her exit because of an enlarged heart. That is correct. Twenty-one years of dismembered carcasses strewn about.
I miss that cat every day.

Yeah, Hulk. My cats have all lived to get their high school and or college diplomas. The Shining Path was twenty-one when we had to assist her exit because of an enlarged heart. That is correct. Twenty-one years of dismembered carcasses strewn about.
I miss that cat every day.

Yeah, Hulk. My cats have all lived to get their high school and or college diplomas. The Shining Path was twenty-one when we had to assist her exit because of an enlarged heart. That is correct. Twenty-one years of dismembered carcasses strewn about.
I miss that cat every day.

You TOTALLY have to use the photo of you on the pool table for the wall at work. Redonkulously adorable.
Happy birthday, June’s Daddy! FYI, June, you’re in the South now. It’s pronounced, “Dad-uh-dee”. Unless you hail from Mississippi, it’s “Dead-ee”. Said very fast. Monosyllabic words are drawn out to distraction, like, “reeee-uD truuuuc-K”.

You TOTALLY have to use the photo of you on the pool table for the wall at work. Redonkulously adorable.
Happy birthday, June’s Daddy! FYI, June, you’re in the South now. It’s pronounced, “Dad-uh-dee”. Unless you hail from Mississippi, it’s “Dead-ee”. Said very fast. Monosyllabic words are drawn out to distraction, like, “reeee-uD truuuuc-K”.

You TOTALLY have to use the photo of you on the pool table for the wall at work. Redonkulously adorable.
Happy birthday, June’s Daddy! FYI, June, you’re in the South now. It’s pronounced, “Dad-uh-dee”. Unless you hail from Mississippi, it’s “Dead-ee”. Said very fast. Monosyllabic words are drawn out to distraction, like, “reeee-uD truuuuc-K”.

Happy Birthday, June’s Dad!
I got a little verklempt about you taking your small glass into the basement and your dad sharing his coca-cola with you. That was just sweet. Then I misted again when Uncle Jim had to discreetly rescue the gerbils.
Wonderful, sweet, touching. Perfect tribute.

I Loooove Beastie Boys! And I loooove your dad, now!
Happy 80 whatever birthday, June’s dad.
My dad used to say, “What are you going to remember years from now, the good time you had or the sleep you got?”
Dads who know how to coax you into fun are the absolute best.
Great tribute, June.